D. Make sure it suits your audience
Answer:
1. Autodidact
2. Ominous
3. Hydrophobia
Explanation:
Unfamiliar words are words that are strange to us because we do no use them every day. In order to understand these words, we could use several methods such as
1. The context in which the word was used. For example, note how I could decode the meaning of autodidact from this sentence. "His independent quest for knowledge turned him into an autodidact". I can decode from this sentence that the unfamiliar word means that the subject or person being talked about is self-taught.
2. Through other examples. "The approaching mob created a weird, strange, and ominous feeling in the little children". The fact that I know the meaning of the other words gives me the idea that the word ominous should mean a strange feeling because something bad is about to happen.
3. Through the root and suffix. Hydro means water while phobia means fear. Therefore, hydrophobia would mean the fear of water.
Answer:
Object.
Fine.
Explanation:
Object.
When used as a noun, the word "object" refers to an item that we can see or touch. It can also be used as a synonym for "goal." However, in the context of a courtroom, the same word is used as a verb (I object), to express disapproval.
Fine.
The word "fine" can be used as two different adjectives, one describing something as being in good condition and the other describing something as particularly thin. However, once again in the context of a courtroom, the same word is a noun, meaning the payment ordered for a violation.
Answer: we litter,pollute ,etc
Explanation:
i say this because polluting and littering kills animals and harms the air we breathe
For good - convenient, brilliant, worthy, glorious, lovely, valid, genuine, significant
For strong - sturdy, influential, athletic, persuasive
these are all in different contexts of the words. I don't know which one you need, but look 'em over